80 So. 763 | Miss. | 1919
delivered the opinion of the court.
„ From the judgment of the circuit court of Noxubee county in quo warranto proceedings filed on information of the district attorney, ousting appellant from the office of supervisor of district No. 2 in said county, this appeal is prosecuted, Appellant, McHenry, was elected a member of the board of supervisors at the general November, 1915, election, and qualified and continued to discharge the duties of the office from January 1, 191,6, to the date of the judgment appealed from.
The petition avers that McHenry was not a resident of district No. 2 of Noxubee county, but that on the 2d day of November, 1915, prior thereto and ever since, the said McHenry is a resident of the city of Macon, and that he is disqualified on that account to hold the office of supervisor for the second supervisor’s district of
“No person shall be a member of tbe board of supervisors who is not a resident freeholder in tbe district for which be is chosen. Tbe value of real estate necessary to be owned to qualify persons in tbe several counties to be members of said board shall be fixed by law. ’ ’
Section 292, Code of 1906 (section 3664, Hemingway’s Code), is as follows:
“A person shall not be a member of the board of supervisors who is not a resident freeholder in tbe district for which be is chosen, and tbe owner of reál estate of the value of three hundred dollars.”
No point was made in tbe trial court on tbe provision of tbe law requiring a supervisor to be a freeholder and there is no contention that appellant did not own real estate in excess of tbe value provided by statute. Tbe sole ground for removal is tbe averment that Mc-Henry was not a resident of district No. 2, but was a resident of the city of Macon, which tbe proof shows to be in district No. 3 of Noxubee county. When all proof was in, appellant moved the court for a peremptory instruction. This motion was overruled. Many instructions were gven, both for tbe state and tbe defendant, in tbe trial of tbe case, and tbe accuracy of various instructions given the state is challenged by an appropriate assignment of errors. Tbe main ground relied upon is the refusal of tbe court to grant appellant a peremptory instruction. The conclusion which tbe court has reached, after most elaborate arguments and a care-full consideration of tbe cause makes it unnecessary to copy in full tbe several instructions which are assigned as error, and renders tbe questions argued on these instructions purely academic. We accordingly go at
The alleged conflicts in the testimony will be adverted to later. We will state first what we consider the prominent and proven facts of the case. Thomas McHenry was born and reared at Ridgeway, the old country plantation situated in district No. 2 of Noxubee county. His old home place was known as Ridgeway, and the post office as Paulette. While a young man he joined the church at Ridgeway, and on reaching his majority registered and voted in district No. 2, and continued to exercise his rights of franchise in district No. 2 until about 1905, when appellant moved with his wife and children to Clarksdale, Miss., where they resided for some years. 'In 1902 appellant temporarily moved to Kemper county on a plantation known as Fox Trap, and resided in Fox Trap from 1902 to 1905. It appears that while he was in Kemper county appellant retained his citizenship and exercised his right to vote in district No. 2 of Noxubee county. In 1911 appellant returned from Clarksdale to Ridgeway, the place of his birth, and there established a home with his wife and children, and there resumed the duties of citizenship. He then registered and voted in district No. 2, increased' his real estate holdings, managed a large plantation, a ginning business, aud had unquestionably for several years no other residence, actual or legal, until about the time he became a candidate for the office of supervisor. It appears that McHenry was the owner of about six thousand acres of land, and farmed extensively. His country home was comfortably and well equipped, and sometimes referred to as “Ridgeway House.” In 1915 appellant was road commissioner for his district under appointment of the board of supervisors, and it appears that he maintained much interest in good roads; that he was instrumental in having es-
The canse was submitted to the jury, however, upon the theory that there is conflict in the testimony, and it is insisted on this appeal that the verdict of the jury is justified by competent testimony and should not be overturned. This phase of the controversy justifies and has received careful thought. We now notice some of the testimony which it is claimed raises an issue of fact. Mr. Sherrod, Mr. Ormsby, and others, while testifying for the state, were asked questions of the following nature:
“Q. Where does Mr. McHenry live now, Mr. Sher-rod? A. In Macon, Miss.
“Q. He lives in Macon, Miss.? A. Yes, sir,
. “Q. Where is Mr. McHenry’s residence at this time? A. Macon, Miss.”
This testimony, while competent under the circumstances and the nature of this case, -in its last analysis simply gave the conclusion of the witness upon a mixed question of law and fact. If these witnesses are to be permitted to state where the legal residence of McHenry is, then they would be permitted to dictate the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court. At best, this testimony was subject to explanation, and must be weighed in connection with all the evidence in the ease. It was entirely proper to ask the witnesses where Mc-Henry maintained a home or domestic establishment, and to elicit the details as to where he ate and slept and where his family resided. But the testimony as a whole shows the true situation. There was no dispute by appellant that his wife and children were temporarily residing in the home of their uncle in Macon, or that McHenry there spent a large part of his time and there slept at nights.
It is insisted by counsel for appellee, that our Constitution requires actual residence within a district as a qualification for the office of supervisor, and that
As to the intentions of appellant there is no material dispute. There was an attempt to contradict his declarations, first by the witness Sherrod, who says he introduced McHenry in Memphis, Tenn., as being from Macon. He says, “I introduced him as Mr. Thomas McHenry of Macon, Miss.,” and it is said that appellant did not then and there deny the accuracy of this introduction. We attach little importance to such an occurrence, especially in view of the fact that Macon is the county site and the railroad point from which any one at Bidgeway would embark for Memphis.
Our court, in Hairston v. Hairston, 27 Miss. 704, 61 Am. Dec. 530, gave an elaborate and satisfactory discussion of residence, and stated clearly the general principles applicable in a case of this kind. It was there stated:
“In all cases, the question whether a person has or has not acquired a domicile must depend mainly upon his actual or presumed intention. . . . That a person being at a place is prima-facie evidence that he is domiciled there, but it may be explained, and the presumption rebutted. The place where a man carries on his business or professional occupation, and has a home or permanent residence, is his domicile; and he has all the privileges, and is bound by all the duties, flowing therefrom.”
Our court in the Hairston Case quotes with approval from Judge Story, Confl. of Laws, p. 45, section 47:
*300 “That even where a party has two residences at different seasons of the year, ‘that will be esteemed his domicile which he himself selects, or describes, or deems to be his home, or which appears to be the center of his affairs, or where he votes or exercises the rights and dutes of a citizen.’ ”
The court also declared in that case that, although the wife did not follow the husband from Virginia to Mississippi, but remained in Virginia, “her legal domicile was that of her husband at the time of his death.” And so we say in the present case, if appellant insisted upon removing to or staying at Ridgeway, that will be his domicile, even though Mrs. McHenry should become so enamored with the conveniences of city life as to decline to live again in the country. This time-honored principle of law has not been repealed even by the emancipation of woman and the adoption of woman suffrage. Judge Cooley states:
“A person’s residence is the place of his domicile, or the place where his residence is fixed, without any present intention of removing therefrom.” Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations (5th Ed.), 6754.
In Gilmore v. Brown et al., 93 Miss. 63, 46 So. 840, .our court, in applying the exemption law, held on facts not so strong as the facts of the present ease that the country homestead of Mr. Brown had never been abandoned, even though the homesteader had moved to the village of Lafayette Springs, and became a qualified voter of the city, and was elected to and held, the office of alderman. In the present case McHenry was a qualified elector in supervisor’s district No. 2, and could not have voted or held the office of supervisor anywhere else. The fact that he registered and voted in that district shows the good faith of his claims and sheds light upon his intentions.
It is generally held that removal of an officer temporarily to the place where his official duties are to be discharged does not affect his citizenship or change his
A case in strict harmony with the views we entertain is. that of Caufield v. Cravens, 138 La. 283, 70 So. 226, and the facts likewise are similar. The court was called upon to construe a provision of the Louisiana Constitution which employed the term “actual bona-fide resident.” And the court in a clear opinion by the Chief Justice held that the provision there under review did not require one to remain continuously in a town or upon the premises of a residence, and that temporary absence brought about by a consideration of business, duty, health, or pleasure would not forfeit citizenship. The case of Hairston v. Hairston, supra, was referred to and again approved by this court in Still v. Corporation of Woodville, 38 Miss. 646, and the. principles stated in the Hairston Case reaffirmed. We do not intend to say that the word “resident” may not have a different meaning according to the context and particular statute in which the word is used. Our duty is to interpret the sense in which it is here used by the framers of our Constitution and by the legislature in carrying the constitutional provision into effect and in prescribing the amount of real estate which a supervisor must own. We are dealing with a qualification for office, a question more or less political. No one seems to have challenged McHenry’s right to register and vote in district No. 2, with the one exception that his opponent in the Democratic primary called in question the legality of his nomination; and surely if McHenry is qualified to vote and the election commissioners have continued to carry his name on the poll books at Paulette, he is qualified to hold office. It would be utterly inconsistent to say that McHenry has the right to vote at Paulette, but not to hold office there.
Reversed and dismissed.